Abstract
Many of the cell surface molecules of lymphocytes or their precursors are expressed in an unpredictable way on a limited set of other cell types. This often seems to involve expression on lymphoid and brain cells. The Thy-1 antigen is in this category, being a major glycoprotein of murine neuronal cells, fibroblasts and thymocytes. Structural studies show that this molecule is homologous with immunoglobulin domains which are the structural sub-units of all immunoglobulin polypeptides. Thy-1 is the size of one immunoglobulin domain and its sequence is most homologous with variable regions of immunoglobulins. It is suggested that Thy-1 is one of a set of surface molecules concerned with triggering interactions between cells and that this is the primitive function of the immunoglobulin domain. Cell interactions could be mediated by domain-like structures and receptors for them in a way which parallels the triggering of immunological effector reactions by the interaction of receptors with immunoglobulin constant regions. If this is so then the structure seen in the immunoglobulin domain would have evolved along with the evolution of cell organisation. The genes specifying the cell interaction molecules could then have provided the genetic material for the evolution of antibody and histocompatibility antigen at the time of vertebrate emergence.
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